167

Is there any command in PHP to stop executing the current or parent if statement, same as break or break(1) for switch/loop. For example

$arr=array('a','b');
foreach($arr as $val)
{
  break;
  echo "test";
}

echo "finish";

in the above code PHP will not do echo "test"; and will go to echo "finish";

I need this for if

$a="test";
if("test"==$a)
{
  break;
  echo "yes"; // I don't want this line or lines after to be executed, without using another if
}
echo "finish";

I want to break the if statement above and stop executing echo "yes"; or such code which is no longer necessary to be executed, there may be or may not be an additional condition, is there way to do this?

Update: Just 2 years after posting this question, I grew up, I learnt how code can be written in small chunks, why nested if's can be a code smell and how to avoid such problems in the first place by writing manageable, small functions.

5
  • 2
    @Usman: If there's not a condition, then the echo (in your example) will never be executed. So you might as well delete it. Sep 19, 2011 at 9:58
  • 2
    Isn't try catch an option? Jul 1, 2014 at 11:07
  • First I thought Tim was just rude... But then I thought he is correct... Why would you have any code behind an unconditional break? Debugging? I like breaking out of for loops with continue; And it would be nice to break up very difficult queries with a "just stop here" command... if (condition) { if ( oneothercondition ) stop; if ( yetothercondition ) stop; // go ahead , all is fine }
    – Joeri
    Apr 29, 2020 at 12:49
  • @Joeri i don't know Muhhamad's initial ideas why he needed break; But in my case now it's debugging purposes, right. In some cases it would save time. In cases when not being able to add breakpoints' (when not using an IDE and/or have to work on a live site for some reasons, etc.) Jul 9, 2020 at 15:37
  • 1
    I don't want this line or lines after to be executed, without using another if ... then don't type the line of code. This minimal reproducible example makes no sense. Jul 28, 2022 at 7:55

21 Answers 21

263

Sometimes, when developing these "fancy" things are required. If we can break an if, a lot of nested ifs won't be necessary, making the code much more clean and aesthetic.

This sample code illustrates that in certain situations a breaked if can be much more suitable than a lot of ugly nested ifs.

Ugly code

if(process_x()) {

    /* do a lot of other things */

    if(process_y()) {

         /* do a lot of other things */

         if(process_z()) {

              /* do a lot of other things */
              /* SUCCESS */

         }
         else {

              clean_all_processes();

         }

    }
    else {

         clean_all_processes();

    }

}
else {

    clean_all_processes();

}

Good looking code

do {
  
  if( !process_x() )
    { clean_all_processes();  break; }
  
  /* do a lot of other things */
  
  if( !process_y() )
    { clean_all_processes();  break; }
  
  /* do a lot of other things */
  
  if( !process_z() )
    { clean_all_processes();  break; }
  
  /* do a lot of other things */
  /* SUCCESS */
  
} while (0);

As @NiematojakTomasz says, the use of goto is an alternative, the bad thing about this is you always need to define the label (point target).

10
  • 38
    Great! Sometimes questions are misunderstood due to their deep sense. You got it perfectly, I need clean code to avoid tracking end of if Nov 15, 2011 at 10:17
  • 2
    If you need to do this ... well ... you're doing it wrong and you need to refactor. Readability isn't something you "hack" into your code by abusing language constructs; it's a self-evident byproduct of well-written code.
    – user895378
    Jun 14, 2013 at 7:23
  • 9
    @rdlowrey, talk is free, so PLEASE show us an example of "Well-written OOP" to solve OP question :3 Jun 14, 2013 at 7:47
  • 8
    Don't confuse sample's request to personal attacks... in fact, you are missing something important, not all coding should be OOP, is an insane thing writing simple tasks with the magic* of OOP. Jun 14, 2013 at 21:52
  • 2
    Remove all else and put clean_all_processes() at the end.
    – Jimmy T.
    Jul 7, 2014 at 18:14
116

Encapsulate your code in a function. You can stop executing a function with return at any time.

4
  • 3
    I though you wanted an if, not a function ? ;) Sep 19, 2011 at 12:55
  • 4
    @arnaud576875 if the code is in a function, than you can use return in the if statement, to break the execution. Nov 15, 2011 at 8:28
  • 1
    A function should have "1 way in" and "1 way out". Multiple RETURNS is sloppy and error prone. May 31, 2018 at 6:17
  • 1
    @OldManWalter That is only true for returning actual data. However error handling is a common exception to this rule. A throw exception or return false in multiple location are perfectly acceptable without hitting the common pitfalls the "1 way in, 1 way out" mentality is trying to protect against. Aug 21, 2018 at 20:49
48

proper way to do this :

try{
    if( !process_x() ){
        throw new Exception('process_x failed');
    }

    /* do a lot of other things */

    if( !process_y() ){
        throw new Exception('process_y failed');
    }

    /* do a lot of other things */

    if( !process_z() ){
        throw new Exception('process_z failed');
    }

    /* do a lot of other things */
    /* SUCCESS */
}catch(Exception $ex){
    clean_all_processes();
}

After reading some of the comments, I realized that exception handling doesn't always makes sense for normal flow control. For normal control flow it is better to use "If else":

try{
  if( process_x() && process_y() && process_z() ) {
    // all processes successful
    // do something
  } else {
    //one of the processes failed
    clean_all_processes();
  }
}catch(Exception ex){
  // one of the processes raised an exception
  clean_all_processes();
}

You can also save the process return values in variables and then check in the failure/exception blocks which process has failed.

3
  • 2
    Exceptions can be usefull in this cases but it seems that you misuse them. Exceptions are exceptional, not for normal program flow. If the fail is exceptional then the process_x-z should throw the exception by itself; clean_all_processes() would be better in a finally-block since it is clean up which must be done anyway.
    – Jimmy T.
    Jul 7, 2014 at 18:23
  • I have improved the solution. Jul 11, 2014 at 5:33
  • Reason I did not use finally is, it's not supported till php5.5 Jul 11, 2014 at 5:37
30

Because you can break out of a do/while loop, let us "do" one round. With a while(false) at the end, the condition is never true and will not repeat, again.

do
{
    $subjectText = trim(filter_input(INPUT_POST, 'subject'));
    if(!$subjectText)
    {
        $smallInfo = 'Please give a subject.';
        break;
    }

    $messageText = trim(filter_input(INPUT_POST, 'message'));
    if(!$messageText)
    {
        $smallInfo = 'Please supply a message.';
        break;
    }
} while(false);
1
  • 1
    No one says you must use that. It is just an example to "break" out. Jun 30, 2016 at 17:40
20

goto:

The goto operator can be used to jump to another section in the program. The target point is specified by a label followed by a colon, and the instruction is given as goto followed by the desired target label. This is not a full unrestricted goto. The target label must be within the same file and context, meaning that you cannot jump out of a function or method, nor can you jump into one. You also cannot jump into any sort of loop or switch structure. You may jump out of these, and a common use is to use a goto in place of a multi-level break...

5
  • 14
    Sorry for being consistent. I have referenced php manual page explaining exact usage of mentioned keyword. And even if it's dirty solution it's still correct solution. Sep 19, 2011 at 9:39
  • 3
    I don't exactly understand how it's not good practice to do so ? It's much more simple than all other solutions ?
    – TOPKAT
    Apr 1, 2016 at 12:00
  • 1
    Agreed with Sébastien. In some cases, the goto operator is very useful, and simple.
    – Jerry
    Dec 28, 2016 at 13:02
  • 8
    Don't worry, programmers will always make you feel you are not coding properly and want we to code like them. This is even more true in php community because we are a bunch of hipster coders and PHP gives us these freedom keywords and the freedom to be so judgmental about how everyone does things. I've used (not extensively) the goto keyword in production codes and I've never had troubles.
    – vdegenne
    Sep 19, 2017 at 21:24
  • A "while" loop with "break" encapsulated within each ''if" condition is nothing else but a fancy way of doing "goto". if($x){break} == if($x){goto elnd_of_loop}. People who make blanket statements that using goto is always a bad code are simply incorrect as in this case the effect is exactly the same and there is nothing dirty about it.
    – Jimski
    Jul 23, 2023 at 19:43
9

There exist command: goto

if(smth) {
   .....
   .....
   .....
   .....
   .....
   goto My123;
   .....
   .....


}



My123:
....your code here....

BUT REMEMBER! goto should not be ever used anywhere in real-world scripts, as it is a sign of poor code.

2
  • 1
    I have tested this script , the code below goto Area1; will not be executed. Apr 22, 2019 at 11:14
  • The "fear" of goto is because it seems appealing to inexperienced programmers who can use it in badly-thought-through ways. But goto has its valid uses, and it's not correct to write in bold letters that it should never be used.
    – osullic
    Jan 3 at 15:02
6

You could use a do-while(false):

    <?php
    do if ($foo)
    {
      // Do something first...

      // Shall we continue with this block, or exit now?
      if ($abort_if_block) break;

      // Continue doing something...

    } while (false);
    ?>

as described in http://php.net/manual/en/control-structures.if.php#90073

5

No, there is no way to "break" an if block like you would inside loops.:(
So turn your test into a switch !

I wonder why nobody encouraged you to use switch statement since (even if you haven't to many test cases)
Do you think it's too verbose?

I would definitely go for it here

  switch($a){
    case 'test':
        # do stuff here ...
        if(/* Reason why you may break */){
           break; # this will prevent executing "echo 'yes';" statement
        }
        echo 'yes';  # ...           
        break; # As one may already know, we might always have to break at the end of case to prevent executing following cases instructions.
    # default:
        # something else here  ..
        # break;
  }

To me Exceptions are meant to raise errors and not really to control execution flaw.
If the break behaviour you are trying to set is not about unexpected error(s), Exception handling is not the right solution here :/.

4
  • Interesting idea but I wouldn't use it for "real" code.
    – Jimmy T.
    Jul 7, 2014 at 18:24
  • 1
    "real", what do you mean ? :/
    – Stphane
    Jul 16, 2014 at 17:08
  • 2
    @Stphane A late comment, but using a switch in this situation goes against the principle of least astonishment. A switch statement is expected to control selection of data, not to control program flow.
    – FWDekker
    Sep 30, 2015 at 20:53
  • «switch compares an expression against differents values and execute a specific block of code depending on which value the expression equals to.» Then each block may evaluate subsidiary expressions that in turn may instruct the execution flow to return or skip some instructions … I don't think the switch would go against the least astonishment principle in this very narrowed usecase but, this said, the original context and requirements may indeed require some refactoring.
    – Stphane
    Apr 19, 2019 at 13:07
5
$a = 1;

switch($a) {

  case "1":

    if  ($condition1){
      break;
    }

    if  ($condition2){
      break;
    }

    if  ($condition3){
      break;
    }
}

In this way I got what I want. I use a switch only has a definite case and then use break in case to choose if condition. The reason why I use the break : condition1 and condition2 may both satisfy, in that situation only condition1 is applied .IF is selective according the order.

2
  • 8
    You don't need variable for this. Just use switch(true) { case true: Aug 1, 2014 at 6:37
  • 1
    switch(true) is an antipattern and removes the only possible benefit that the verbose language construct has over other techniques -- "solitary evaluation". Jul 28, 2022 at 6:56
2

I had the same problem. A solution is to pile if. The first example is simplistic but...

    $a="test";
    if("test"==$a)
    {
        do something
        //break; We remove from your example
        if(comparison) {
            echo "yes";
        }
    }
    echo "finish";

Or, you can use goto.

    $a="test";
    if("test"==$a)
    {
        do something
        goto the_end_of_your_func;
        echo "yes";
    }
    the_end_of_your_func:
    echo "finish";
1

No.

But how about:

$a="test";
if("test"==$a)
{
  if ($someOtherCondition)
  {
    echo "yes";
  }
}
echo "finish";
3
  • 3
    Thanks, but, I am looking for a simpler version to this to avoid too many if statements Sep 19, 2011 at 9:32
  • 2
    @Usman: If you have multiple conditions, then you need to check them. Checking a condition traditionally involves an if statement. I'm not sure how you expect to avoid this. Sep 19, 2011 at 9:42
  • The OP explicitly stated that they don't want nested if blocks. This unexplained snippet could be consolidated as if ("test" == $a && $someOtherCondition) { echo "yes";}. Jul 28, 2022 at 7:57
1

Just move the code that is not supposed to be executed to else/elseif branch. I don't really see why would you want to do what you're trying to do.

1

The simple answer is that no, there isn't a way to break from an if statement without completely stopping the execution (via exit). Other solutions won't work for me because I can't change the structure of the if statement, since I'm injecting code into a plugin, like so:

if ( condition ) {
  // Code and variables I want to use

  // Code I have control over

  // Code I don't want to run
}
// More code I want to use
0

Answering to your question whether that is achievable or not, then yes that is achievable using "goto" operator of php.

But ethically, its not a good practice to use "goto" and of there is any need to use goto then this means that code need to be reconstructed such that requirement of goto can be removed.

According to the sample code you posted above, it can be clearly seen that the code can be reconstructed and the code that is no more required can be either deleted or commented (if possibility is there for use in future).

0
$arr=array('test','go for it');
$a='test';
foreach($arr as $val){
  $output = 'test';
  if($val === $a) $output = "";
  echo $output;
}
echo "finish";

combining your statements, i think this would give you your wished result. clean and simple, without having too much statements.

for the ugly and good looking code, my recomandation would be:

function myfunction(){
  if( !process_x() || !process_y() || !process_z()) {
    clean_all_processes();  
    return; 
  }
/*do all the stuff you need to do*/
}

somewhere in your normal code

myfunction();
-1

i have a simple solution without lot of changes. the initial statement is

I want to break the if statement above and stop executing echo "yes"; or such code which is no longer necessary to be executed, there may be or may not be an additional condition, is there way to do this?

So it seems simple. try code like this:

$a="test";
if("test"==$a)
{
  if (1==0){
      echo "yes"; // this line while never be executed. 
      // and can be reexecuted simply by changing if (1==0) to if (1==1) 
  }
}
echo "finish";

if you want to try without this code, it's simple. and you can back when you want. another solution is comment blocks. or simply thinking and try in another separated code and copy paste only the result in your final code. and if a code is no longer nescessary, in your case, the result can be

$a="test";
echo "finish";

with this code, the original statement is completely respected and more readable!

-2

The simple solution is to comment it out.

$a="test";
if("test"==$a)
{

  //echo "yes"; //no longer needed - 7/7/2014 - updateded bla bla to do foo
}

The added benefit is your not changing your original code and you can date it, initial it and put a reason why.

3
  • 2
    This does not solve the problem. The break could also be in an if.
    – Jimmy T.
    Jul 7, 2014 at 18:27
  • You cant comment in an if statement? Or comment out one? Do you mean use an if to exclude execution? If so what's the point of the break then, isn't that what if statements are for? Just comment that out too. Sorry, but don't see your point. Jul 7, 2014 at 21:14
  • Something like this: a:if("test" == $a) { ... if(...) break a; ... }
    – Jimmy T.
    Jul 8, 2014 at 17:27
-3

What about using ternary operator?

<?php
 // Example usage for: Ternary Operator
 $action = (empty($_POST['action'])) ? 'default' : $_POST['action'];
?>

Which is identical to this if/else statement:

<?php
 if (empty($_POST['action'])) {
   $action = 'default';
 } else {
   $action = $_POST['action'];
 }
?>
1
  • In PHP7: $a = $_POST['action'] ?? 'default'; Apr 20, 2019 at 10:33
-3

To completely stop the rest of the script from running you can just do

exit; //In place of break. The rest of the code will not execute

-3

I'm late to the party but I wanted to contribute. I'm surprised that nobody suggested exit(). It's good for testing. I use it all the time and works like charm.

$a ='';
$b ='';
if($a == $b){
echo 'Clark Kent is Superman';
exit();
echo 'Clark Kent was never Superman';
}

The code will stop at exit() and everything after will not run.

Result

Clark Kent is Superman

It works with foreach() and while() as well. It works anywhere you place it really.

foreach($arr as $val)
{
  exit();
  echo "test";
}

echo "finish";

Result

nothing gets printed here.

Use it with a forloop()

for ($x = 2; $x < 12; $x++) {
    echo "Gru has $x minions <br>";
    if($x == 4){
    exit();
    }
}

Result

Gru has 2 minions
Gru has 3 minions
Gru has 4 minions

In a normal case scenario

$a ='Make hot chocolate great again!';
echo $a;
exit();
$b = 'I eat chocolate and make Charlie at the Factory pay for it.';

Result

Make hot chocolate great again!
1
  • The reason this has a lot of downvotes is because the commenter didn't explain well enough. exit() stops the execution of every line of code that comes after it. This can result in unfavorable outcomes. It's best to use exit() when an error has occurred and you do not want the code to continue executing. $my_var = do_work(); //false if error if( $my_var === false ){ exit(); } // Do important tasks with $my_var Stack messes up the format of the code im trying to write but should be easy enough to understand Oct 3, 2020 at 20:22
-7
$a="test";
if("test"!=$a)
{
echo "yes";                   
}
 else
 {
  echo "finish";
}

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